An informed guide to the pandemic, with the latest developments and expert advice about prevention and treatment. |
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| The New York Times |
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As we head into this summer weekend, let's pause a moment to take stock of how far the U.S. has come. While many of us are busy planning vacations, reconnecting with family, or even making new friends, it can be easy to forget that this moment didn't always feel guaranteed. |
For a reminder, I dug into our archive of reader responses from the early days of the pandemic to see how much things have changed. |
The comments were collected from March 2020, when we still knew very little about the virus. Some people still didn't believe the threat was real. "If the C.D.C. says there have been between 29,000 and 59,000 seasonal flu deaths in the USA this year, and coronavirus has killed (only) around 1,700 people, then what's the big hype?" one reader asked. |
But in the days the followed, readers' worries poured in. You reported wiping down mail and shopping carts, avoiding public spaces and frantically cleaning every surface in your homes. |
"Convinced that general recommendations to washing hands and not touching the face are inadequate, we wash our faces with soap more than once a day — with emphasis on applying soap on eyelids (eyes shut, of course) as well as inside nostrils (using little finger) and around our lips," wrote Basil R. Bhan, from Schenectady, N.Y. |
I had forgotten about the obsessive need many of us had to touch base with friends and family, until I came across a comment from Melissa M. Weiksnar from Buffalo, N.Y. |
"Another phenomenon of these days — has anyone coined "check-in fatigue"?" she wrote. "Loving everyone checking in on each other, but sometimes an emoji(s) or just-a-few-words reply may need to suffice for an otherwise longer response — and that's OK!" |
Within days, we began receiving comments from people like Cesar Chavez, who continued to work in New York, even as it shut down. "I am one of those considered essential, I come every day to my job wondering if today will be my last," he wrote. (In a recent follow-up email, he said his family avoided infection, and he was glad to see New York finally reawaken. "We might get slapped down but we get up like an old prize fighter that never heard the bell.") |
Other readers began pandemic projects, or rearranged their homes, or enjoyed home-cooked meals. But in the solitude of lockdown, it didn't take long for things to get a little weird. |
"After dyeing my own hair, I've also seriously considered giving my dog a red mohawk," Audrey Cho wrote from Mill Valley, Calif. |
It took a few days for us to get our first report of an illness from a reader, but on March 29, Thomas "T.J." Aitken told us about his wife, Sarah. |
"I posted a string of photos and documentation on Facebook as my wife got sick," he wrote. "The fear in the responses was palpable." (T.J. told me this week that he and his wife, who are over 65, both had Covid, and still have mild lung issues, but they have been vaccinated.) |
In the months that followed, we would receive many more reports of illness and many deaths. More than 10,000 of you also shared your moments of joy, as well as of frustration, anger, resignation and more recently — hope. |
We'd like to say thank you for sharing your stories with us over the past 15 months. And whether you're in lockdown, self-isolation or beginning to emerge from the stress of the pandemic — please, keep us posted. |
Even as the Delta variant takes hold across the world, virologists are starting to worry about an even newer and potentially more virulent version of the coronavirus, known as Delta Plus. |
Delta Plus is a sub-lineage of the highly contagious Delta variant that has spread rapidly through India, Britain, the United States and other countries. But the new variant carries a spike protein mutation that is also found in the Beta variant, first identified in South Africa, which virologists say could make it more transmissible. |
Officials are particularly concerned that Delta Plus could usher in another surge of the virus in India, which is just beginning to emerge from a devastating second wave. |
Because this particular variant has been discovered only recently, scientists have limited information about it. But they have begun to speculate about its ability to spread. |
"It is most likely capable of dodging immunities," said Shahid Jameel, a virologist and director of the Trivedi School of Biosciences at Ashoka University in Sonipat, India. "That is because it carries all symptoms of the original Delta variant and also from its partner Beta variant." |
What else we're following |
I went to an acoustic music camp the second week of June. Most everyone had been vaccinated, and on the last night of the camp, at the big finale music jam, we were all singing together at the top of our lungs. There was so much dopamine being generated in that room, with no fear of infection. I realized I had not done that for 19 months. I came home on a high and with gratefulness for the vaccine. Life is almost feeling normal. — Bess Crider, Waynesville, N.C. |
Let us know how you're dealing with the pandemic. Send us a response here, and we may feature it in an upcoming newsletter. |
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